While other MediaPost newsletters and articles remain free to all ... our new Research Intelligencer service is reserved for paid subscribers ...

Subscribe today to gain access to the every Research Intelligencer article we publish as well as the exclusive daily newsletter, full access to The MediaPost Cases, first-look research and daily insights from Joe Mandese, Editor in Chief.

Commentary

Hulu's Latest Original Veers Off In Two Directions

Hulu, home of “The Handmaid’s Tale,” still rolls
out far fewer original series than rival Netflix or even Amazon Prime. So it would be a shame for subscribers to miss any of them.

Take its latest effort, a six-episode dreamed about a
single female seeking romance after a breakup. But, as you might surmise from its title, “The
Bisexual” offers a new twist on this tried-and-true formula.

The series represents a tour-de-force
for director/co-writer/star Desiree Akhavan, who already won acclaim this year as director/co-writer of the feature drama, “The Miseducation of Cameron Post” — winner of
the Grand Jury Prize at this year’s Sundance Film Festival.

Akhavan has become something
of an expert at examining the role of sexual preferences in our society.

“The Miseducation of
Cameron Post,” now available free to library card holders on Kanopy, is about a teenage girl forced to undergo
gay conversion therapy.

“The Bisexual” is about a lesbian woman who,
following a breakup with her lover, decides to add men to her sexual diet. However, coming out as a bisexual in today’s world is as verboten to her as coming out as a gay person would have been
decades earlier.

Playing a bisexual is hardly new to Akhavan. She wrote,
directed and starred as an un-closeted one, living in Brooklyn and also recovering from a breakup with a woman, in her 2014 debut film, “Appropriate Behavior.” That comedy is now streaming
on Amazon Prime.

Even earlier, she directed, wrote and played a Brooklyn
lesbian in the 16-episode web comedy series, “The Slope.”

In “The Bisexual,” produced by Hulu in
association with Britain’s Channel 4, Akhavan plays Leila, an Iranian-American running a successful business in London with her lesbian lover, Sadie (Maxine Peake). When they take a
“break” from their personal partnership, Leila starts exploring her sexual identity in a series of encounters with both men and women. Can Leila ultimately win back Sadie, or is she, as
one lover has called her, an “emotional intimacy whore”?

The series includes a couple of in-jokes. At one point, Leila requests that a TV set be tuned back to Channel 4. In the final episode
of Season One, there’s a reference to ‘The Handmaid’s Tale.”

“The
Bisexual,” of course, isn’t another “Handmaid’s Tale” for Hulu. But it’s well worth checking out on its own terms.